Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Report: Wide racial disparity in prison discipline

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ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) >> Black and Hispanic people incarcerat­ed in New York state prisons are more likely than white people to face further punishment once they wind up behind bars, according to a state inspector general report released Thursday.

A Black person behind bars in New York from 2015 to 2020 was more than 22% more likely to get cited for misbehavio­r than a white person, according to the report, which looked at misbehavio­r reports that were ultimately dismissed. At the same time, a Hispanic person behind bars was over 12% more likely.

Inspector General Lucy Lang said the state’s correction­s department has failed to come up with strategies to eliminate the racial disparitie­s for years. Her report was sparked by a 2016 investigat­ion by The New York Times that found rampant racial epithets and disparate disciplina­ry treatment against the largely Black and Hispanic prisoner population.

Factors fueling the disparitie­s likely range from explicit and implicit racial bias among correction­s staffers. The report also pointed to shifts in state prison population demographi­cs at a time when the number of people behind bars in New York has declined 41% since 2015.

Lang called for annual anti-bias training for all state correction­s employees, more analysis of disciplina­ry data, wider use of centralize­d hearing officers and the expanded use of fixed camera systems in all state correction­s facilities.

“Although racial disparitie­s may not start at the prison gates, unfortunat­ely they also do not end there.” Lang said in a statement.

Those who are cited for misbehavio­r can face sanctions such as: verbal admonition, segregated confinemen­t in a cell, restitutio­n for property damage, loss of privileges, or forfeiture of contraband money. People behind bars might also lose their good behavior allowances, which can reduce their period of incarcerat­ion.

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